It depends on the element. If only one isotope occurs in nature, then all the atoms in a pure element are the same. However, most elements have two or more stable isotopes, so that there will be more than one kind of atom in most samples of such elements.
Some elements have isotopes - atoms with a different number of neutrons.
One if it is pure sulfur. Sulfur is an element so the on atom is sulfur!
There are no "atoms in an element," but rather atoms OF an element. If you are trying to find the number of atoms in a sample of a pure element you divide its weight by its molar mass and then multiply by 6.022 x 10^23 to get the answer in atoms. The answer options are 2,3, or 4.
92 kinds of atoms Hope this helped :)
Gold is the element gold no matter how many atoms of it you have.
Silver is an element, pure silver would contain only silver atoms.
i think 94 kinds of atoms occur to earth
21 different kinds of atoms
200
25
A pure element contains one sort of atoms, and all the elements have the same number of protons (which define the element). But the atoms can have different masses, so called "isotopes" (see link). Thus, chemically there is only one kind of atoms in a pure element, but there can be several physically different kinds of nuclei in a pure element.
Rutherfordium is a single chemical element.